New Jersey Court Won't Block Electronic Voting 64
SilentChris writes "A New Jersey court has denied an e-voting ban request made by Rutgers University on behalf of a voter. The plantifs argued the machines 'are "inherently insecure" and do not offer a backup paper record of each vote, which means there is no way to verify ballots if there were a recount' (much the same as arguments made on Slashdot). The court responded by saying the 'alternative is worse. Every professional agrees that a paper ballot is a formula for disaster'. Despite the setback, the case hasn't been officially dismissed. However, the plantiffs will need to take action today to have an effect on next week's presidential election."
It's getting a bit close (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yet more proof (Score:1)
Re:Yet more proof (Score:2)
because NJ got first chioce.
(OK I know offtopic, go ahead mods mod me down, I deserive it.)
Do they? (Score:5, Insightful)
Except
Re:Do they? (Score:4, Insightful)
For the electronic voting equipment companies' bottom line.
Re:Do they? (Score:2)
Surely he didn't really say that! You can't trust a judge who speaks in absolutes, not unless it's a true binary situation.
I'm a professional and no one asked me.
Professional? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Professional what? Professional Liars?
Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his arse (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm a "professional" and I say that paper is more secure and less prone to problems than a half-baked tech idea that was selected based upon the strength of its glossy brochure than its functionality.
I notice that the Voting terminals here in Texas had wide-open USB ports. What's to say that my little keyfob wouldn't accidentally be inserted, and that pesky autorun.inf would do strange, scary things to the machine? How are you then going to prove that you voted for who you say you voted for? You can't. How is that not a formula for disaster?
Here's a novel idea: combine the best of both worlds. Tech is great at constraining input in appropriate ways (only pick ONE, etc), whereas paper is harder to counterfeit. Have the terminal as the input device that then prints out the completed ballot, which is then dropped in the box. This eliminates the problems with people not being able to punch holes in cards correctly, while providing the security of knowing your vote was recorded correctly.
Not having a paper trail at all means your vote can be changed easily and without detection; having a paper that is only a "receipt" also means that your vote can be changed easily and without detection. Having a paper that IS your vote means that it is harder to change your vote, and would take some collusion and effort: printing money is easy; altering money is hard.
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmm, just out of curiousity, how would you prove that you voted for who you say you voted for with a paper ballot? Not like they let you take a copy of your ballot home with you, or the orginal ballots have names inscribed on them, is it?
I haven't used a paper ballot in nearly 20 years. But seems to me that they didn't have serial numbers that were cross-indexed with the voter rolls then, so switching ballots out wouldn't hav
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:3, Informative)
My understanding of US paper voting is this (based on how it works in Europe):
You vote on a specially printed ballot with security features.
Your vote goes into a locked ballot box which the local polling workers can't open.
The ballot box is taken to be opened and counted
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
You vote on a specially printed ballot with security features.
So, they don't have printing presses in Europe? People counterfeit money all the time - if they can do something as complex as money, a ballot is a cinch.
Your vote goes into a locked ballot box which the local polling workers can't open.
The ballot box is taken to be opened and counted.
All of these steps are done in front of representatives of opposing candidates.
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:1)
Again - it works everywhere else - what makes you think the US is so special it wouldn't work for you?
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
Not that I believe that it is still happening, in spite of the fact that one of the people Gore brought to Florida to help him with his recounts was the son of the Chicago Mayor most notorious for that sort of thing. Interestingly enough, the son was also Mayor of Chicago. What a coincidence!
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
Seriously, in the USA, with 50 different States, replacing a dead man isn't terribly hard. Basic technique - find someone who died in a state different than the one he was born in. Not hard to do, we're a moderately mobile people. Get some fake ID made, and request a copy of his birth certificate from the issuing State. Go elsewhere with that perfectly legal, valid birth cer
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
That said, we don't do it that way over here...
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
Well, instead of refusing to see the problem(s) with the current US system, you could take some clues from other countries to improve the system. But I guess this goes against the "we're the best country/democracy in the world" propaganda the US public has been fed for so long as well as the Not Invented Here syndrom. And of course, you would have to admit the current system is not perfect, something the current administration may have a problem with...
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
After all, if the Voter Cards weren't mailed out properly, we'd disenfranchise people. Which would be a bad thing. Or of the Voter lost his card, he'd be disenfranchised. Again, a bad thing. Or if you were, by a mischance, not issued a Voter Card because your name matched that of a felon, we'd disenfranchise people. A bad thing.
We have Voter Rolls here. When you vote, you go to your precinct, and pres
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:1)
Assuming you're a professional (you can create an unlimited number of perfect-but-fake ID's, you have a way to be assured you will never be recognised by anyone who knew the deceased, you have a way to ensure dead people are not purged from the voti
You do use an ATM don't you? (Score:2)
How many ATM transactions happen every day? How many credit card transactions happen every day? We know how to make electronic machines that can replace manual or mechanical processes. If these things weren't very secure (I'm not saying they're 100% secure) then we wouldn't use them nearly as much as we do. If they weren't more accurate
Re:You do use an ATM don't you? (Score:2)
Re:You do use an ATM don't you? (Score:2)
Plus listen to the ATM when you take the money out and you'll hear it print a note on the internal printer, even when you don't request a receipt it still prints a paper trail.
"The bottom line is that these electronic voting machines can be, and probably already are, many times more accurate than paper ballots."
"and probably already are", they're unverifable, its not enough to say "and probably alrea
Re:You do use an ATM don't you? (Score:2)
Re:You do use an ATM don't you? (Score:2)
I think that's a question best addressed to Diebold.
Even better (Score:2)
Even better: you could have the voting machines keep a complete GUI transactional log of every voting session, to help verify the final paper ballot count.
Polling places using electronic voting machines are already reporti
Re:Even better (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
The computer terminal would be used as an input device that can verify that the voter's input makes sense and give him a chance to revise his choices if he'd like. If he'd like to cast a vote that doesn't make sense to the machine, he should be able to do that too. (why? I don't know, I just don't like the idea of someone not having complete freedom to vote as they'd like.)
Then, it will simultaneously increment its counters, just as the Diebold is supposed to be doing
Re:Too bad the Judge doesn't know tech from his ar (Score:2)
How do you know that it will actually run? Are they running linux or windows or do they even have an OS at all? Are the USB drives enabled? Do the machines even have USB drivers installed? Etc... Etc...
How are you then going to prove that you voted for who you say you voted for? You can't.
Sounds just li
Ballot Box Observers (Score:4, Insightful)
Does anyone know of any state law (NJ or otherwise) which guarantees independent observers the right to verify the "ballot box" is empty before voting begins, to observe the box at all times during vote casting, verify that the box is sealed after election is closed, and observe the counting of the votes post-election? If so, I think an electronic ballot box would fail all those tests.
Re:Ballot Box Observers (Score:3, Informative)
This happens in Australia. The observers aren't really independant - but each candidate on the ballot in question gets to send one.
Sounds like far too sane an idea for voting in the United
Re:Ballot Box Observers (Score:2)
Re:Ballot Box Observers (Score:1)
I believe this is the case nationwide, but I can't cite a source.
What happens next could be of interest: The total number of write-in ballots are determined, but not tallied. No attempt is made to determine voter intent, which is to say, even if you wrote-in the name of someone on the ballot, it will not count as a vote for that candidate, at least not yet. These are treated as "disputed"
Re:Ballot Box Observers (Score:2)
allegations of flaws in a certain version of the e-vote software places all votes cast on boxes running that version into dispute.
This would be the entire counties/systems votes since they all should be running the exact same version. Hmmm... That would be interesting, the entire states voting challenged all in one go.
Have the courts heard of "hackers"? (Score:1)
Fundamentally, there is
Re:Have the courts heard of "hackers"? (Score:2)
In order for the Chinese Crackers to get access to the voting machines, the voting machines would have to be on the internet and accepting all incoming connections. Adn they would have to be able to hack them in under 12 hours. All electronic machines I know of so far only make outgoing Phone Modem connections to report results, never going over the internet. The computer that tallies the individual results is not connec
Hmm (Score:1)
However
Electronic voting should be strongly resisted if they refuse to provide backup, paper receipts. Now, I don't want voters walking out of polling places with ballots, but if the database gets corrupted, I want that paper ballot to be available so my vote gets counted!
I am worried for the country (Score:3, Insightful)
I see so few people voting for some one, I see most people voting against the other. I am at the point I think we should abolish the current 2 partys and see how the 3rd parties do, I wil back the constution party.
But this just shows how fscked up the system has become now. I wish that they would go to the voting boxes we have here in the Pittsburgh area older, but I don't think you ever heard of said problems in Pittsburgh, or it could be Pittsburgh is a one party system ares (you are eather out of office or a democrate here)
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:2)
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:2)
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:1)
you are incorrect. SCOTUS didn't "write a law". Roe vs. Wade was a ruling on the constitutionality of existing laws criminalizing abortion. So even though we m
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:2)
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:2)
The default rule in the US is that activities are lawful unless actively made unlawful.
So if there was no law that talked about abortion at all, neither saying it was legal nor illegal, then it would by default be legal.
In order to make it illegal, a government has to pass a law saying that it is illegal.
The power of a government to make a law is limited by higher laws. For example, cities cannot make laws that their state legislatures tell them they cannot make. State legi
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:1)
Actually they ruled that the desicion to have an abortion falls under the right of privacy, not that it was it's own seperate right.
From the actual decision [tourolaw.edu]:
Re:I am worried for the country (Score:2)
What! (Score:1)
IT works everwhere else it even worked in previouse American elections, Perhaps the statment should read "Every Electronic voting booth professional agrees that a paper ballot is a formula for disaster'
Whats the big deal with E-Voting (Score:1)
Re:Whats the big deal with E-Voting (Score:2)
Electronic voting is the way of the future, but the engineers developing these machines can't overcome the p
What a crock. (Score:4, Interesting)
The Canadian federal elections use paper ballots, and every vote is counted within eight hours of the closing of the polls.
Paper ballots work. Non-transparent systems like most of the e-voting systems in the US are the recipes for disaster.
San Francisco does it almost right IMHO (Score:3, Interesting)
Then you get a reciept, and they put it through a machine, which counts it. Unfortunately you don't get a copy of who or what you voted for, which is one area they could improve on.
If you select both Yes and No the machine will reject the ballot and you have a do over. If you select 2 or more people for the same office it gets rejected and its a do over.
Its not perfect, but it seems to work pretty well. Like I said, all I think it needs is a reciept.
Re:San Francisco does it almost right IMHO (Score:2)
Unfortunately you don't get a copy of who or what you voted for, which is one area they could improve on.
You shouldn't get such a copy. If you can prove your votes to a third party, then said third parties can start employing bribes, extortion, etc. to alter votes.
Re:San Francisco does it almost right IMHO (Score:1)
1) An election official comes by to pick up the memory card from the machine. (You have to break one of those counting seals to pull it out. I don't remember, but I think the seal goes with the memory.) That gets driven to the seccrit spot to be counted.
2) Poll workers count and checksum the number of paper ballots (used, counted from
Slashdot Poll (Score:1)
Recipe for disaster (Score:2)